Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Parasites of coral reef fish include nematodes, Platyhelminthes (cestodes, digeneans, and monogeneans), leeches, parasitic crustaceans such as isopods and copepods, [52] [53] [54] and various microorganisms such as myxosporidia and microsporidia. Some of these fish parasites have heteroxenous life cycles (i.e. they have several hosts) among ...
Protozoan infections are parasitic diseases caused by organisms formerly classified in the kingdom Protozoa. ... Hexamita salmonis is a common flagellated fish ...
Protozoa (sg.: protozoan or protozoon; alternative plural: protozoans) are a polyphyletic group of single-celled eukaryotes, either free-living or parasitic, that feed on organic matter such as other microorganisms or organic debris.
The name literally translates as "the fish louse with many children". The parasite can infect most freshwater fish species and, in contrast to many other parasites, shows low host specificity. It penetrates gill epithelia, skin and fins of the fish host and resides as a feeding stage (the trophont) inside the epidermis.
M. cerebralis is one of the 1,350 known myxozoan parasites known to infect fish. [1] Once thought to be a species of Protozoa, taxonomists noticed characteristics that more closely related M. cerebralis to the phylum Cnidaria. These features included cnidocysts, which are tentacles that are used to hold onto and prey upon the host.
A typical example of a ciliated microorganism is the Paramecium, a one-celled, ciliated protozoan covered by thousands of cilia. The cilia beating together allow the Paramecium to propel through the water at speeds of 500 micrometers per second.
In fish, the disease is most important in salmonids. Marine and freshwater fish can be infected. These protozoans can be found on most continents. Bloodfeeding leeches are implicated in the transmission of the bloodborne species. The protozoans can be identified in skin and gill biopsies and blood samples.
Henneguya zschokkei is found in fish as an ovoid spore with two anterior polar capsules and two long caudal appendages. [6] Individuals are very small (about 10 micrometers in diameter), [7] but are found aggregated into cysts 3–6 mm in diameter at any place in the animal's musculature.